In Flynn’s mystery set in 1950s Washington, D.C., a self-destructive detective risks everything to learn the truth behind the death of a young woman.
Detective Shane Kinnock, a traumatized World War II veteran, was once a man of principle who thanklessly investigated police corruption and longed to right the world’s wrongs. Now he’s a heavy drinker who’s only hanging on to his job because his congressman father knows the right people. In Rock Creek Park, an untamed wilderness in the middle of Washington, D.C., he finds the body of a long-dead young woman. It's a mystery that will test him to the breaking point before he learns the truth of who this woman was and who wanted her dead. Shane becomes a man driven by his own ghosts, determined to find justice for this victim, and perhaps redemption for himself. Flynn combines the best of noir detective fiction with spartan, affecting prose. The tale highlights the rampant corruption and flagrant racism of 1950s Washington (“a town full of hatreds”) while still weaving a thread of hope via the character of Shane, a grieving knight errant who still longs to do right by a world that has often cast him as a villain. He travels the streets of beautiful, broken Washington following desperate leads, trusting the wrong people, and finding unlikely allies, unable to stop until he finds his answers. Readers will hope he finds some relief for his self-hatred and begins to find his true self again. Flynn’s writing also drives the story of a young woman with a tortured past and intertwines it with the protagonist’s determination to solve the mystery of her death. Overall, it’s a riveting whodunit with surprising twists that calls to mind the works of Raymond Chandler.
An affecting and compelling crime novel.